WRAT is clearly one of the winners in the latest Monmouth/Ocean ratings. Undoubtedly, they were beneficiaries of Press and their foolish decision to drop G Rock. I'm sure many former WHTG/WBBO listeners have jumped on board, but not me. The Rat's all about Led Zeppelin, Van Halen, Def Leppard, Aerosmith, overplayed early '90s grunge, and modern lunkhead rockers like Nickelback, Hinder and Saving Abel (right now they're playing Billy Squier ... ugh), and I'm not into any of that. But it's one of the less offensive stations around - at least they aren't playing Beyonce like pretty much everyone else. I knew the station was going to experience a ratings increase - the fact that they shot up so much without tweaking their format at all is even more impressive. Imagine how they would have done had they attempted to court alternative rock fans a bit more.
The other big story that we have yet to discuss here is WKMK (Country Thunder 98.5). Despite having a signal that only covers a small part of Monmouth County, it shot up two points in the latest book and is now fifth overall in the market. Maybe the increased advertising presence had something to do with its success, or possibly the new branding connected better with listeners than "Kountry With A K". I am even more surprised by the success of Country Thunder considering that most of its coverage area can also get WPUR (Cat Country 107.3) pretty strong as well.
WRFF (Radio 104.5) had a respectable showing for a Philadelphia station, also reflecting the dearth of an in-market Alternative station. Sure, with a playlist about half the size of G Rock's, limited listener interaction (no request line or all request shows to my knowledge), some baffling non-Alternative selections (The Fray, Black Crowes, Blues Traveler, 3 Doors Down, Peter Gabriel's Delilah staple "In Your Eyes") and a "Shut Up And Play The Music" attitude, it won't make you forget G Rock, but it's something that fulfills a need in the market, and the same can't be said about Hit 106. The station could be good if they dug a little deeper and didn't slam some overplayed Gold titles (no joke - recently I tuned in 104.5 on three separate occasions on different days, and within 15 minutes each time I heard The Offspring's "Self Esteem"), but it appears Clear Channel isn't interested in appealing to the dedicated fans of the Alternative format. The safe approach seems to be working for now, but if Radio 104.5 refuses to evolve, it won't stay that way.
WRXP remained stagnant, but it would be my station of choice if it came in well in Southern Ocean County. They have the variety that so many other rock stations lack, and they're not afraid to play The Smiths, Pixies, Replacements, etc. It might be musically unfocused, but at least it's never boring.
Everything that Press neglected to do with G Rock, they did with Hit 106 ... everything from full-page newspaper ads and those ubiquitous "FINALLY" billboards to outside-the-box sales strategies and frequent remotes. I saw a couple of billboards when G Rock Radio launched as a two-station broadcast in '05, and I know they did remotes occasionally, but nothing even approaching the level of what's going on with Hit 106. I had friends asking me what happened to G Rock's Ocean simulcast when it moved from 98.5 to 106.5, which tells you something about how ineffective Press was in getting the word out about the switch. Press can blame listeners all they want for G Rock's ratings, but the listeners had nothing to do with G Rock's lack of promotion, nothing to do with the decision to drop the popular morning show for one hosted by a friend of the General Manager at the time, and nothing to do with all the liberties taken with the format. If the executives at Press understood anything about alternative rock, they would have known that: a) mixing in the likes of Pink and Maroon 5 was a terrible idea, and b) the heavy trailer-park rock influence the station had upon the G Rock Radio launch was ill-advised, especially on the frequency that hosted one of the oldest commercial Alternative formats in the country. There's no question they lost a lot of listeners during this period, but the egos at Press are just too big for anyone to admit that they made mistakes. It took them six years to get to where they should have been from the beginning, but a lot of people had given up on the station at that point. Because of the lack of passion and enthusiasm for alternative rock on the part of Press executives, as well as their boneheaded decisions, the people of Monmouth/Ocean end up big losers. I hope an Alternative format gets another shot here eventually, and that these mistakes will NOT be repeated.